Space Debris: SpaceX Falcon 9 to Crash into Moon on August 5, 2026
A spent SpaceX Falcon 9 upper stage, identified as 2025-010D, will crash into the Moon on August 5, 2026, near the Einstein crater, highlighting space debris concerns and offering a scientific opportunity to study lunar soil impact effects.
The object, part of the Blue Ghost Mission 1 launched on January 15, 2025, entered an unpredictable Earth-Moon orbit after deploying its payloads. Gravitational influences from Earth, the Moon, and Sun altered its path, leading to the inevitable collision.
Scientists plan to use the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) to study the impact, gaining insights into lunar soil depth and ejecta patterns. This event underscores the need for better space debris management in cislunar space, as highlighted by the Inter-Agency Space Debris Coordination Committee (IADC), which recommends disposing of such stages in heliocentric orbits.
The crash, though posing no danger to Earth, adds to the lunar surface's growing collection of human-made debris and prompts calls for stricter end-of-life protocols for missions beyond Earth’s orbit.